Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Oct. 14, 1943, edition 1 / Page 3
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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1943 PRE - INDUCTION DRIVER COURSE TO BE ORDERED North Carolina Plans To Help Army Prepare Driv ers. The Division of Instrustional Service, the Division of Negro Education, the Highway Safety Division, and the North Carolina Board of Education, have cooper-* atively planned a series of teach er institutes in preinduction driv er education. The Center for Safety Education at New York University, the National Safety Council, the National Conser vation Bureau, the Quartermaster Corps, and the Preinduction Training Branch of the Fourth Service Command, are furnishing experts to assist in the institutes which are to be held in the fol lowing places: Biyson City, Bryson City school, Oct. 11; Ashville, David Millard junior high school Oct. 12; Hickory Central highschool, Oct. 13; Boone, College science building Oct. 14; Winston-Salem. Old West End building, 0ct.15; Rocky Mount, Rocky Mount high school, Oct. 25; Raleigh, Hugh Morson high school, Oct. 26; Greensboro, Greensboro senior school, Oct. 27; Charlotte, Central high school, Oct. 28; Fayetteville, Central elementary school, Oct. 29; Wilmington, Ne|wr Hanove giph school, NoV. 15; New Bern, New Bern high school, N0v.16; Elizabeth . City, Elizabeth City high school, Nov. 17. Driver education in North Car olina is planned to betten pre i XJAVE you tried Alka-Selt- Jlf ~ 5.1 „ zer for Gas on Stomach. T(r '2S'^—| Sour Stomach, “Mornintr T y l"/ After’* and Cold Distress? JJI .■=£-/ I* not. why not? Pleasant, in action, effective. Thirty cents and Silty m He's NERVINE i*P*OR relief from Functional Ner ”■ voua Disturbances euch as Sleep lessness, Crankiness, Excitability, Nervous Headache and Nervous In digestion. Tablet* 35$ and 755, Liquid 25$ and SI.OO. # Read direc tions and use only as directed. ; Pain Pill often relieves Is Headache, Muscular Pains -it, \HI or Functional Monthly Pains —25 for 255, 125 forjl.oo. Get them at your i drug store. Read directions (/*'/! \/ L- as directed, f / PENDER TENDER CHUCK ROAST LB 28 c T - BONE STEAKS, LB 35 c VEAL SHOULPE CHOPS, L V 27 c PURE LARD LOOSE, I B 18° FRESH FISH AND OYSTERS (4) V-8 Cocktail 29c (5) Soy Beans SA 2 'ii ß c» AN 9c (3) Tomato Soup Can 9c (4) Chicken Noodle K s 2 S2~ 25c Pender’s Best Flour Plain Self Rising S™ 59c *o* 6lc 25-lb $1.42 gs-ib $1.46 Pender’s Hotel & Restaurant Coffee Ug 22c Nabisco Sugar Graham Crackers H wßwsi d 19c (4) Wesson Oil (4) Snowdrift Pint OQ. 1-lb Bottle Jar CLEANSER v : NORTHERN Sunbrite <*> 5c Handy Towels ßoll 9c DUKE’S RED HEART Relish 16c Dog food 13c ILLSBURY CLEANSER flour 7o£b* 64c Old Dutch 2 c ™* 15c NORTHERN ' WINDOW CLEANER ■ Tissue 3 Rc,u 15c Windex ' 15c pare civilian drivers and to help meet the needs of the Army for 2,000,000 trained drivers of mili tary motor vehicles. Experience has shown that one out of four enlisted men should be trained in driving. Our mod ern mechanized Army needs more drivers, not only for the trans portation of essential war matri als- ammunition and supplies but also for moving infantry and artillery divisions, and for ambu lances, repair shops, and hund reds of other types of vehicles. Several hundred thousand men have already received this train ing at the various Army camps, but many more thousand need to be trained- Many of the men who will be called upon to drive ceh icles have ben coming from the high schools and colleges. Some •of them have the advantage of the training courses that been 'Of fered in these schools. Mrs. Bill P. Flythe, of Raleigh, divisional director , in Roxboro Thursday is particularly interest ed in the program. The Army - the Preinduction Division of the Armed Forces wants to see more of the basic instruction in driver education given in the (schools. For this reason they have developed an excellent, “Preinduction Driver Education in Schools and Col leges”, 15,000 copies of |which have been sent out to the schools of the country. The former driv er training courses in the high schools has been streamlined, with new units added to meet the war emergency covering such sugjects as “Difficult Driving”, “Convoys and Blackouts”, “Emer gency Repairs”, and “Map Read ing”, with far more stress on preveentive-maintenance inspect ion and repairs. The schools can provide the background of in structibn in this area and thus decrease the time required by the Anny to train its drivers. Several of the states are rap idly moving to the front in this high school driver-training pro gram. For example, Illinois has well over 500 high schools giv ing instruction; Wisconsin, over 300; lowa, more than 200; New Jersey, 150; (While Michigan, In diana, Pennsylvania, Delaware. Virginia and many others will be emoarking on a more intensive driver-education program early in this school wear. The North Carolina plan has'already aroused interest in other states. The basic instruction that can be given to students in high schools followed by the intensive and practical instruction given by the Highy Safety Division, will not only provide the Army with hundreds of thousands of > well-informed drivers, but will ’ also furnish a vast reservoir of • expert, desciplined drivers for our commercial, industrial, and » j private transportation ofter the [ war and for years to come. Ronald Hocutt Director Divi ; sion of Highway Safety State . Department of Motor Vehicles. . Ralph J. Andrews, Director Driv . er Education, Division of Instruct -1 ional Service State Department . of Public Instruction. ' SCHOOL BUSSES ; MUST NOT CART 3 ; TO EXTRA EVENTS f Buses May 'Be Or(ly In Use For School Work. ’ Raleigh, Oct. 14.—School buses may not tje Used to transport students to athletic games, stats j or county fairs, or similar events, the Office of Defene Transport , ation said today. ' Commenting on an increasing 3 number of requests for permis -1 sion to use school buses for such r purpoes, all of which have been denied, Joeph B. Eastman, direct -1 or of the ODT. called attention . to the ODT’s statements of last November 16 on policy governing j school bus services, as follows: “Thei use of school buses for j school 'trnasportation during the j emergency shall be limited to the transportation of students teach ’ cr=, and other school employees en route between their homes j and placqp of regular daily in struction. School buses shall not j be used for the transportation of any group to any special ev ent except as otherwise provid , ed in. regulations of the Office if Defense Transportation, nor for the transportation of pupils to . and from home for the noon lunch. School buses shall not be . used for the personal transport . ation of the owner, operator or . other persons.” Mr. Eastman further pointed out that under General Order ODT 10A, effective last March ] 16, charter or special bus service [ relating to school activities could P be provided only for “students, t teachers, and other school em- I ployees from their homes to their schools for the purpose of j permitting such persons to attend a regular daily session of school, or from such schools to their homes after such attendance: Provided, that no such school bus shall transport any such per • eon in excess of one round-trip on any one calendar day.” Gamble To Start Revival Services By Next Sunday* The Rev. Harry Y. Gamble, of Statesville, will conduct a series' of revival services at First Bap tist church beginning Sunday, October 17th. Mr. Gamble is con- { sidered a very able and forceful speaker. Swift Fellowship Given To State Research on supplemental feeding raw being conducted at the Agricultural Experinynt Station at State College may im prove the gains made by hogs I fed raw soybeans, Dr. L. D. Beaver, director of the Station, reports. D. A. O. Shaw, Earl H. Host etler and Dr. Walter J. Peterson, members of the animal industry department, are using funds pro vided through a grant of fellow ship in nutrition by Swift and Company to study ways to pro vide the essentian food element, crystine, to hogs fed on the beans. Dr. Peterson, in charge of the research, says, “Crystine is one of the amino acids, containing sulphur, and is essential for the growth of the hog. It is contain ed in the raw soybean pigs glean in the fields but not in a digest ible form. Unless the pig gets cystine from some supplemen tary feed it cannot make use of raiW soybean protein and there fore cannot thrive.” The scientists' have taken a number of pigs and fed them on a raw soybean, diet to yhich is added* cystine in various* forms produced in the labratory to de termine which is the most desir able. By-products of meat packing seem to offer usable sources of this*£ssential amino acid. There fore, Swift and Company has of fered one of its fellowships in nutrition to the Experiment Sta tion as a helo in trying to solve his problem of he North Carolina ho? producer. •> Materials now being tested to add cvstine to the hog diet in clude hoof meal and hydrolyzed hog hair. Before Pearl Harbor the United States obtained all its agar, us ed in ice creams, sherbets, pud dings and other products from | Japan, PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C. 1 .- , \j^ #J^!"*i C*-i*- *\ovu wr-MHU* “They Give Their Lives —You Lend Your Money' State College Hints To Homemakers By Ruth Current N. C. State College To distribute the wear on sheets we suggest to homemak ers that they put the small hem at the top of the bed at least half of he time. To protect sheets from snag ging and tearing we suggest that a mattress cover be placed oyer the bed springs. Remember too that a bit of adhesive tape carefully bound over a rough place on the spring will also help to avoid a tear. Wash rag or chenille rugs just as you wash blankets; let them drip dry. When hanging, fold over line and fasten two clothes pins down each hanging side, pinning double thicknesses. Shake or brush when nearly dry to fluff up. Wash curtains as you would silks. Put curtains of fine materi al such as lace and scrim in a net bag to wash. Starch keeps them fresh, crisp, and clean long er. Use a large kettle so that all curtains for one room can ba starched evenly and at once. Do FOLLOW THE CROWDS to the WINSTEAD Warehouse and learn why they keep coming back with more tobacco for another good sale here. Bring Us Your Next Load / and let us please you % A good sale every day WINSTEAD Warehouse ■ , . Roxboro, N. C. not hang curtains on the line to dry but rool up in a sheet. Iron when damp dry. In hanging sheets out to dry, put large and small hems togeth er; swing-large hem over the line, with small hem on the out side. Place clothespins at one foot intervals. Straighten selvag es. When removing, fold sheet crosswise again, and it is ready for ironing. Hang tabe clothes lengthwise, putting selvage edges together. Pin closely, like sheets. Hang guest towels singly with a third over the line, and with embroidered part or colored edg ing at the bottom. Hang bath towels singly, a third over the line. Shake when dry to fluff up nap. Do not iron towels. For handerchiefs, napkins and washclothes, hang two or three over each other by the hem, not byte corners. R E"v a"™" 11 For any watch or clock that we fail to repair. - GREEN’S “The Square Deal Jeweler” MOBILIZATION OF FARMS TO START AGAIN FOR YEAR Miss Current Os Raleigh Makes Announcement Os Coming Program. - The battle for the conservation of foods, textiles and equipment and the battle for healthy farm families in 280,00 homes in North Carolina begins this week with the “Home Mobilization” drive. This special drive will be con cluded on January 1 and by that date it is hoped that as least 90 per cent of all farm families in the State will have been reached, it was announced yesterday by Ruth Current, Home Demonstra tion leader of the State College Extension Service. “Every effort will be made to reach the maximum number of families and the leadership de veloped in the ‘Neighborhood Leader System” will play a big part in the success of the drive,” Miss Current said. “Many battles were won on the home front in 1943 by hard work, determination and the ab ility of farm families to plan and •organize their ;work. The farm woman is serving with distinc tion and by her side stands the county home demonstration a gent of the Extension Service with accurate facts and sound judgment,” the State Home Lead er commented. The whale shark is the largest living fish. FOREMOST CLEANERS Call Us Phone 3601 SERVICE DRY CLEANERS 1 IK EAT WELL BE HAPPY! jL GOOD FOOD Has a lot to do with how you feel. We pride ourselves on selling the best that the market offers. SEE US FOR Vegetables i " f Meats Flour Canned Goods ' (. t and Juices / Everything for the table of the ryfljgfj or poor. ?, .41 §1 Clayton & S lewart | PAGE THREE Only the children and grand children of the king and the el dest grandson of the Prince of Wales may be called prince (or princess) in Great Britain. Notice STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF STATE Preliminary Certificate of Disso lution. |To Ail To Whom These Presents May Come —Greeting: Whereas, it appears to my sat isfaction, by duly authenticated record of the proceedings for the voluntary disolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the stockholders, deposited in my of fice, that the ARCH JONES MO TORS, INCORPORATED, a cor poration of the State, whose prin cipal office is situated at No. Depox Street, in the Town of Roxboro, County of Person, State ; of North Carolina, (J. E. Kirby bring the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom pro cess may be served), has com plied with the requirements of Chapter 22, Consolidated Statues, entitled “Corporations,”” prelim inary to the issuing of this Certi ficate of Dissolution: NOW THEREFORE, I, Thad Euie, Secretary of State of the State of North Carolina, do here by certify that the said corpor ation did, on the 27th day of Sep tember, 1943, file in my office a July executed and attested con sent in writing to the dissolution of said corporation, executed by all the stockholders thereof, which said consent and the re cord of the proceedings afore said are now' on file in my office as provided by law. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hefeto set my hand and af fixed my official seal at Raleigh, this 27th day of September, A. 1943. THAD EUR-E, Secretary of State. . 19-7-14-21-28
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 14, 1943, edition 1
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